SummaryMany angiosperms use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as “self” recognition and/or rejection mechanisms to prevent self-fertilization. Self-incompatibility (SI) is encoded by a multiallelic S locus, comprising pollen and pistil S-determinants [1, 2]. In Papaver rhoeas, cognate pistil and pollen S-determinants, PrpS, a pollen-expressed transmembrane protein, and PrsS, a pistil-expressed secreted protein [3, 4], interact to trigger a Ca2+-dependent signaling network [5–10], resulting in inhibition of pollen tube growth, cytoskeletal alterations [11–13], and programmed cell death (PCD) [14, 15] in incompatible pollen. We introduced the PrpS gene into Arabidopsis thaliana, a self-compatible model plant. Exposing t...
SummaryExpressing a pollen self-incompatibility gene from Papaver rhoeas (poppy) in Arabidopsis thal...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a mechanism used by angiosperms to prevent self-fertilization. Here we ...
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Papaver rhoeas involves an allele-speci®c recognition between stigmatic...
Many angiosperms use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as “self” recognition ...
SummaryMany angiosperms use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as “self” recog...
Self-fertilization, which results in reduced fitness of offspring, is a common problem in hermaphrod...
Many flowering plants are hermaphrodite, posing the problem of self-fertilization and the subsequent...
Higher plants produce seed through pollination, using specific interactions between pollen and pisti...
Cell–cell communication is vital to multicellular organisms and much of it is controlled by the inte...
Higher plants produce seed through pollination, using specific interactions between pollen and pisti...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is used by many angiosperms to reject 'self' pollen and avoid inbreeding. ...
Sexual reproduction in higher plants uses pollination, involving interactions between pollen and pis...
Sexual reproduction in higher plants uses pollination, involving interactions between pollen and pis...
Flowering plants have evolved complex genetic mechanisms of self-incompatibility (SI) to overcome th...
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants is controlled by recognition mechanisms involving the male g...
SummaryExpressing a pollen self-incompatibility gene from Papaver rhoeas (poppy) in Arabidopsis thal...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a mechanism used by angiosperms to prevent self-fertilization. Here we ...
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Papaver rhoeas involves an allele-speci®c recognition between stigmatic...
Many angiosperms use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as “self” recognition ...
SummaryMany angiosperms use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as “self” recog...
Self-fertilization, which results in reduced fitness of offspring, is a common problem in hermaphrod...
Many flowering plants are hermaphrodite, posing the problem of self-fertilization and the subsequent...
Higher plants produce seed through pollination, using specific interactions between pollen and pisti...
Cell–cell communication is vital to multicellular organisms and much of it is controlled by the inte...
Higher plants produce seed through pollination, using specific interactions between pollen and pisti...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is used by many angiosperms to reject 'self' pollen and avoid inbreeding. ...
Sexual reproduction in higher plants uses pollination, involving interactions between pollen and pis...
Sexual reproduction in higher plants uses pollination, involving interactions between pollen and pis...
Flowering plants have evolved complex genetic mechanisms of self-incompatibility (SI) to overcome th...
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants is controlled by recognition mechanisms involving the male g...
SummaryExpressing a pollen self-incompatibility gene from Papaver rhoeas (poppy) in Arabidopsis thal...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a mechanism used by angiosperms to prevent self-fertilization. Here we ...
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Papaver rhoeas involves an allele-speci®c recognition between stigmatic...